Subject: Scientific Metajoke
Date: Mon, Feb 26 2001 00:00:02 EST

Chris Nelson's been trolling rec.humor.funny.reruns again, and he passed this one on to Jeff Victor, who (of course) passed it on to us...


From: jjchew@math.toronto.edu
Newsgroups: rec.humor.funny.reruns

An engineer, a physicist and a mathematician find themselves in an anecdote, indeed an anecdote quite similar to many that you have no doubt already heard. After some observations and rough calculations the engineer realizes the situation and starts laughing. A few minutes later the physicist understands too and chuckles to himself happily as he now has enough experimental evidence to publish a paper. This leaves the mathematician somewhat perplexed, as he had observed right away that he was the subject of an anecdote, and deduced quite rapidly the presence of humour from similar anecdotes, but considers this anecdote to be too trivial a corollary to be significant, let alone funny.

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